Other members of the Twitch community built their own workarounds, and former Twitch engineer Justin ‘TheGunrun’ Ignacio linked to these creations to help streamers mass-delete all their VODs. Some creators found a solution by reuploading their clips to YouTube, relying on Google’s Content ID system to identify which clips were in violation. The short delay in DMCA takedown processing effectively meant creators had only days to delete, in some cases, years of content. Going forward, Clips that are identified as having copyrighted music will be deleted without penalty to help ensure you do not receive DMCA notifications from rights holders.- Twitch Support October 20, 2020 This content was identified and deleted for you, in accordance with its obligations under the DMCA. Their solution to DMCA is for creators to delete their life's work. It is INSANE that informs partners they deleted their content – and that there is more content in violation despite having NO identification system to find out what it is. The platform was already facing heavy criticism for the nuclear-esque solution last week, when creators found out via email that some of their clips had been automatically removed by Twitch - but Twitch couldn’t tell them which clips had received DMCA takedown notifications. The whole thing is a bad look for Twitch, which is coming under increasing pressure from all sides.
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